Legion’s General Chapter Concludes

The papal delegate to the Legion of Christ ended a three-year period of reform on Feb. 25.

The papal delegate to the Legion of Christ ended a three-year period of reform on Feb. 25, declaring the congregation "reconciled with themselves, with their history, with the world and the Church."

Closing the Legion’s Extraordinary General Chapter, Cardinal Velasio De Paolis said the congregation had "looked inside themselves with a new and purified glance" and examined their current situation "in order to single out potential traces of pollution left by the founder of the Legion in their identity and action, in their legislation and way of working."

He added that in "renewing their vocations, their self-giving to Christ and to one another, they have been freed of the burden that weighed on their backs. They have gone out of themselves and have found their place within the whole Regnum Christi movement."

In 2010, Benedict XVI appointed the Italian cardinal to help oversee reform of the congregation, after a Vatican investigation revealed widespread corruption and abuse by its founder, Father Marcial Maciel.

On Feb. 6, the Legionaries of Christ released a statement that condemned the actions of their founder, apologized to his victims and set a new course for the congregation’s future.

Cardinal De Paolis said the Legion had accomplished the two principal tasks of the Extraordinary General Chapter: to give the congregation a new central government and to revise its constitutions. The constitutions have now been sent to the Holy See for review.

Pope Francis must now decide whether to sign the new constitutions. The Vatican has already intervened in the elections of the Legion’s new governing body, choosing a deputy director and one of the general counselors.

Cardinal De Paolis said the chapter fathers "quickly brought forward questions to which Legionaries throughout the world expected answers." Most importantly, he said, "great strides" had been made on dealing with issues related to Father Maciel — "the one issue to which all the rest of the questions were connected."

The papal delegate said the Legion’s assessment of the founder was "broad, objective and serene — almost detached," recognizing his transgressions and thankful to the Church for helping the congregation heal the wounds after "penance and purification."

He said the Legion itself could be considered a "victim" of Father Maciel’s crimes, even though some superiors bore responsibility "in particular for the delays in which they operated." Cardinal De Paolis said the chapter asks forgiveness from Father Maciel’s victims, but also "recognizes that the Legionaries are called to take on the consequences of his faults, like our Lord Jesus Christ, who took the sin of the world upon himself, in order to atone for them insofar as possible."

"In light of this renewal," he said, the Legion can "once again take up its mission within Regnum Christi and the life of the Church. At the same time, the chapter fathers invoked God’s mercy on the founder."

Cardinal De Paolis said the chapter had drafted a path for the central government to follow "in the next six years" and added that the two-month meeting had provided "an ample examination of conscience that has deeply considered the life of the Legion, propelling it towards a future full of hope."

"Looking back over this spiritual journey in all of its breadth, one should be filled with wonder," Cardinal De Paolis said. "The question comes up: Who has done all of this? The answer is already on your lips because you have meditated on it in your hearts. This is the moment to thank the Lord with the sentiments that filled Mary’s heart."

In an accompanying statement signed by the chapter fathers on Feb. 25, the Legion summarized the chapter’s achievements and expressed copious thanks to those involved in the reform.

They recalled that the Legion has "asked for pardon from God and from those who have suffered because of these events, and we have renewed our commitment to do what is necessary to ensure that such events are not repeated in the future."

Comments

Some years ago, as a cleric, I was visiting Rome. Many of the LC’s were visible on the streets. On a few occasions I approached them - always in pairs - and was struck that my desire for a conversation or some information about their Order was met with a brush off or simple sheer arrogant rudeness. Sometime later I happened to read their Constitutions ( perhaps it was their Customary) and I was not suprised to read words that the LCs were told not to speak or have anything to do with other clergy or members of other Religious orders. The implication being - they were superior to them and contact with others could result in a lessoning of standards.
I thought at the time - “This is not a religious order at the heart of the Church. This is a sect practicing mind control.”
I am glad to hear the muck in that Order is now being cleared out. I pray that wise and prudent pastors will lead them. I do believe they have great work to do and have done great work. But their arrogance, if it still lingers, needs to be checked.

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